Van Gogh’s Artistic Roots: The Hague School and French Realism
Mar 28, 2022 - Jan 29, 2023
Ticket: $14.00*
* Prices displayed are maximum known list price without fees. Other rates may apply
Buy tickets
In conjunction with the upcoming exhibition Van Gogh in America, this installation presents a selection of paintings and works on paper by Dutch and French realist artists, all of whom were contemporaries of Vincent van Gogh, while several of them significantly impacted his early artistic development.

Van Gogh particularly admired the painterly innovations of the Hague School––a group named for the city in the Netherlands where its core artists lived and worked beginning about 1870. Van Gogh spent time in The Hague and knew several of these artists personally, including Anton Mauve and very likely Jozef Israëls, who especially captivated the young Van Gogh.

Mauve, Israëls, and other fellow Hague School artists explored themes that were also taken up by Van Gogh: rural landscapes with waterways, marshes, and dunes in the environs of The Hague; traditional ways of life maintained by peasant and fishing communities; and seascapes with sailboats, windmills, and canals.

Hague School artists took their inspiration from Dutch 17th-century painters and from French artists, known as Barbizon School and working in the tradition of realism, most prominently Jean-François Millet, who featured French peasant and rural themes in his work. Léon-Augustin Lhermitte followed in Millet’s footsteps and devoted his career to depicting the French countryside. Van Gogh had life-long regard for Millet and valued the work of Lhermitte––works by both artists will be included on a rotating basis in the installation, which features 12 works on paper and paintings from the DIA’s permanent collection.
Show lessRead more
Official website
dia.org
Detroit Institute of Arts
Closed now
Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites